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blustery

[ US /ˈbɫəstɝi/ ]
[ UK /blˈʌstəɹi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. blowing in violent and abrupt bursts
    a cold blustery day
    a gusty storm with strong sudden rushes of wind
    blustering (or blusterous) winds of Patagonia
  2. noisily domineering; tending to browbeat others

How To Use blustery In A Sentence

  • He offered his arm to her, and the four of them swept out of the door into the blustery weather.
  • So this year, consider creating an interior file in your soul called Pajama Day, and when things get crazed, out of nowhere, declare a blustery March Saturday Pajama Day, or a blistery August Sunday Pajama Day or any blessed day you feel like stopping and hanging out in your own holy wholeness. Dr. Susan Corso: Pajama Days: Holiness For The Rest Of The Year
  • Kurosawa initiated his best work in 1948 with Drunken Angel , in which he teamed Takashi Shimura ( as a blustery alcoholic doctor ) and a young Toshiro Mifune ( as a hotheaded gangster ) .
  • In June, the blustery, flustery Lewis Black published his non-apologia, Me of Little Faith; a couple of weeks later, the death of George Carlin reminded everybody what a cranky old infidel he was. An Atheist Walks Into a Bar …
  • As the match began the blustery wind freshened and cooled with the huge Hawks flag fluttering above the old pavilion.
  • It has been a cold, windy, blustery, blizzardy Christmas. Blizzards and peppermint candy canes....
  • Yesterday was not a blustery day. Times, Sunday Times
  • A blustery wind may help in dispersing the pollen, but it will also carry it further.
  • Once you waddle into those snow pants and head out into that blustery winter weather, you are rolling the dice with your life.
  • Falstaff was big and fantastically blustery, and in that context, we somehow managed to avoid discussing the politics of the day, enjoying a jolly frivolous evening in all.
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